- Ohio State Penitentiary
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This article is about the current prison in Youngstown, Ohio. For the prison that once stood in Columbus, see Ohio Penitentiary.
Coordinates: 41°06′34.85″N 80°34′39.36″W / 41.1096806°N 80.5776°W
The Ohio State Penitentiary is a 502-inmate capacity supermax Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction prison in Youngstown, Ohio. The facility is designed to hold the state's most dangerous prisoners with poor conduct records.
Throughout the last two centuries, there have been two institutions with the name Ohio Penitentiary or Ohio State Penitentiary; the first prison was in Columbus, Ohio.
Level 5 inmates occupy cells that are 6 1/2 x 11 feet and include a sink, toilet, desk, stool, and a slab of concrete with a thin mattress. These inmates are in lock down for twenty-three hours per day in their cell. Inmates in Levels 5B and 5A are classified as those who fail to adapt or those who are active participants/ring leaders of security threat groups.
Level 4 inmates occupy similarly-designed cells but have additional freedom to move about within specific cell blocks. Inmates classified as Level 4B may also exercise within their specific cell block, but are also required to lock down before security staff enter the cell block to perform range checks, serve food, etc. Inmates classified as Level 4A are not subject to this restriction.
Death Row inmates reside in two cell blocks, one of which is an extended privilege block. To be placed in the extended privilege block an inmate must be free of conduct violations for at least three years. While the majority of Ohio's male death row inmates are currently held at OSP, it is expected that all but a few high security death row inmates will be transferred to the Chillicothe Correctional Institution by January 2012. [1]
Ohio State Penitentiary currently holds level 5, 4 and 1 inmates. Level 1 inmates are housed outside of the institutional fence in their own building. Inmates placed in segregation are locked down with the exception of showers.
Original prison
Main article: Ohio PenitentiaryThe original Ohio Penitentiary was located in Columbus, Ohio. It was razed in 1998 to make way for the Arena District. During its time of operation, the penitentiary hosted many notable prisoners including James H. Snook and the novelist O. Henry. During the American Civil War, the prison housed members of John Hunt Morgan's Confederate cavalry, who had been detained following Morgan's Raid. Morgan and several of his men successfully escaped captivity and returned to the South.
References
- ^ http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2011/10/04/death-row-move-to-chillicothe-frees-up-cells.html
External links
- [1] Ohio State Penitentiary
- [2] Ohio Death Row Inmates
- [3] Bill Nichols, "Contemplating Torture," Prisonersolidarity.org, Jan. 27, 2006.
- [4] Andrew Welsh-Huggins, "Federal judge allows state to move death row to Youngstown," The Associated Press, Oct. 4, 2005
- [5] Staughton and Alice Lynd, "Prison Advocacy in a Time of Capital Disaccumulation," The Monthly Review, August 2001.
- [6] Daniel Sturm, "Ohio's Abu Ghraib," ZNet, August 3, 2005.
Categories:- Prisons in Ohio
- Youngstown, Ohio
- Supermax prisons
- Capital punishment in Ohio
- Buildings and structures in Mahoning County, Ohio
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